They Tracked the MH17 Missile from Space but Just Can't Seem to Find a Whole Boeing 777 Anywhere

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Publicerades den 24 jul 2014

While the U.S. is "laying out its case" (derisive air quotes) against Russia, claiming that even though there is no hard evidence it's still Russia's fault for "creating the conditions" (more derisive air quotes) that led to Malaysian flight MH17 getting shot down, back in this media-manipulated reality the rest of us plebs are living in, we're all supposed to readily believe the U.S. tracked the MH17 SA-11 Buk missile from the moment it was launched using our space-based surveillance system...and yet...***

- NO ONE ANYWHERE HAS ANY IDEA where MH370, a whole entire 300-ton Boeing 777, went that's still missing from March.

Apparently that just dropped magically off the face of the planet without a trace, right?

Well...they might know a little something, but the NSA is refusing FOIA requests on MH370 on the basis of national security, so...

If this whole thing doesn't just reek of the kind of magical fairy tale that could get the whole world embroiled in a third world war...we're not sure what does.

When
Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 went down on July 17, 2014, we were
immediately inundated with base propaganda trying to convince us that
the shootdown could be traced back to the Kremlin. But what was this
rush to judgement based on? What have we learned about the crash since
then? Why has MH17 completely disappeared from the news cycle? And who
really stood to benefit from the disaster? Find out the answers to these
questions and more in this week's edition of The Corbett Report.

2 kommentarer:

--Kiev must publish record of MH17 communications with traffic control – Russia--

Published time: August 19, 2014

Kiev should make public the records of communications between the Ukrainian air traffic control and the Malaysian Airlines flight 17 in the hours before it was shot down over Ukraine’s turbulent east, Russia’s UN envoy said.

The issue was among several Russia raised at a UN Security Council meeting, which was called by Russia to discuss the progress of the investigation into the tragic incident, which killed 298 people in July, Vitaly Churkin said. Moscow sees the shortage of proper evidence known to the public so far as wrong.

“As far as we know, [UN’s civil aviation watchdog] ICAO is being kept on the sidelines of the investigation, which has been conducted for some time,” Churkin said.[...]